美国劳工运动与以色列建国

Adam Howard
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摘要

大量的非国家行为者在以色列国的建立过程中发挥了重要的作用,而且往往是默默无闻的。美国劳工运动就是其中之一,在巴勒斯坦建国前的“伊休夫”(Yishuv)时期,它帮助巴勒斯坦的犹太社区发展政治和社会基础设施,并在建国后继续这样做。这场运动由各种劳工联合会、工会和兄弟会组成,通过独特的财政和政治资源组合帮助了犹太复国主义事业。美国劳工组织,尤其是犹太劳工运动中的劳工组织,通过在巴勒斯坦培育劳工运动和影响美国的决策机构,为犹太国家的形成奠定了基础。他们通过为巴勒斯坦的犹太工人合作社购买土地,在那里建造贸易学校和文化中心,以及向巴勒斯坦犹太工人总联合会(Histadrut)提供大量经济援助来协助这一进程。美国劳工组织还游说国会盟友、白宫和地方官员制定帮助伊休夫人的政策。他们甚至在英国政府统治巴勒斯坦期间向其施加压力,并游说联合国成员国投票赞成1947年的巴勒斯坦分治,并于1948年承认以色列。美国服装业的犹太劳工领导层在动员更大规模的劳工运动以支持犹太国家方面发挥了关键作用。然而,最初,大多数犹太劳工领袖并不支持这一努力,因为许多人来自“外滩”或立陶宛,波兰和俄罗斯的犹太工人联合会,这是一个成立于1897年的犹太社会主义政党。像任何其他民族主义运动一样,邦迪主义者认为犹太复国主义是工人运动反对资本主义的一种转移。相反,邦迪主义者强调犹太文化是向犹太大众传播社会主义的工具。然而,随着时间的推移,出现了两个实际问题,促使邦迪主义者接受对伊休夫的援助,并最终接受对以色列国的援助。首先,为犹太难民找到一个免受迫害的避难所;其次,承诺协助巴勒斯坦迅速发展的工会运动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The American Labor Movement and the Establishment of Israel
A remarkably large number of nonstate actors played important and often unheralded roles in the creation of the state of Israel. The American labor movement was one such actor, assisting the Jewish community in Palestine to develop a political and social infrastructure in the “Yishuv” years before statehood, and then continuing to do so afterward. This movement, consisting of various labor federations, unions, and fraternal orders, aided the Zionist cause through a unique combination of financial and political resources. American labor organizations, especially those in the Jewish labor movement, helped lay the groundwork for the formation of a Jewish state by nurturing a labor movement in Palestine and influencing the US policymaking apparatus. They aided this process through land purchases for Jewish worker cooperatives in Palestine, the construction of trade schools and cultural centers there, and massive economic aid to the Histadrut, the General Federation of Jewish Workers in Palestine. American labor organizations also lobbied congressional allies, the White House, and local officials to generate policies assisting the Yishuv. They even pressured the British government during its mandate over Palestine and lobbied United Nations (UN) member states to vote for the partition of Palestine in 1947 and Israel’s recognition in 1948. Jewish labor leadership within the American garment industry played the key role in mobilizing the larger labor movement to support a Jewish state. Initially, however, most Jewish labor leaders did not support this effort because many descended from the “Bund” or General Jewish Workers’ Union of Lithuania, Poland, and Russia, a Jewish socialist party founded in 1897. Like any other nationalist movement, Bundists viewed Zionism as a diversion of the labor movement’s fight against capitalism. Instead, Bundists emphasized Jewish culture as a vehicle to spread socialism to the Jewish masses. Yet, in time, two practical concerns developed that would move Bundists to embrace assistance to the Yishuv and, ultimately, to the state of Israel. First, finding Jewish refugees a haven from persecution and, second, a commitment to assisting a burgeoning trade union movement in Palestine.
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